Maureen Lander
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Maureen Robin Lander (born 1942 in
Rawene Rawene is a town on the south side of the Hokianga harbour, in Northland, New Zealand. State Highway 12 passes to the south. The town lies at the apex of a peninsula. A car ferry links it to Kohukohu and the northern Hokianga. History Rawen ...
) is a New Zealand weaver, multimedia installation artist and academic. Lander is of
Ngāpuhi Ngāpuhi (also known as Ngāpuhi-Nui-Tonu or Ngā Puhi) is a Māori iwi associated with the Northland regions of New Zealand centred in the Hokianga, the Bay of Islands, and Whangārei. According to the 2023 New Zealand census, the estimate ...
(Te Hikutu subtribe) and
Pākehā ''Pākehā'' (or ''Pakeha''; ; ) is a Māori language, Māori-language word used in English, particularly in New Zealand. It generally means a non-Polynesians, Polynesian New Zealanders, New Zealander or more specifically a European New Zeala ...
(New Zealand European) descent and is a well-respected and significant artist who since 1986 has exhibited, photographed, written and taught
Māori Māori or Maori can refer to: Relating to the Māori people * Māori people of New Zealand, or members of that group * Māori language, the language of the Māori people of New Zealand * Māori culture * Cook Islanders, the Māori people of the Co ...
art. She continues to produce and exhibit work as well as attend residencies and symposia both nationally and internationally.


Education

Lander began learning weaving with noted Māori weaver
Diggeress Te Kanawa Diggeress Rangituatahi Te Kanawa (9 March 1920 – 30 July 2009) was a New Zealand Māori people, Māori tohunga raranga (master weaver) of Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Kinohaku descent. At the time of her death she was regarded as New Zealand's ...
in 1984 and spent many years researching fibre arts. The title of her 1993 master's thesis was ''In Sites: the predicament of place: personal perspectives and intercultural viewpoints on aspects of site related art''. In 2002 she was the first person of Māori descent to gain a Doctorate in Fine Arts at a New Zealand university. *1963
Wellington Teachers' College Wellington College of Education (formerly Wellington Teachers' Training College) was established in 1888 with the purpose of educating teachers in New Zealand. It became the Faculty of Education of Victoria University of Wellington, formed from ...
*1987 Bachelor of Fine Arts (Photography)
Elam School of Fine Arts The Elam School of Fine Arts, founded by John Edward Elam, is part of the University of Auckland Faculty of Creative Arts and Industries, Faculty of Creative Arts and Industries at the University of Auckland. It offered the first Bachelor of ...
,
University of Auckland The University of Auckland (; Māori: ''Waipapa Taumata Rau'') is a public research university based in Auckland, New Zealand. The institution was established in 1883 as a constituent college of the University of New Zealand. Initially loc ...
*1989 Bachelor of Arts in Māori Studies, University of Auckland *1993 Masters of Fine Arts (Sculpture), First Class Honours, Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland *2002 Doctor of Fine Arts, Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland


Career as an educator

Lander worked as a teacher before attending Elam School of Fine Arts. From 1986 she worked as a photographer for the University of Auckland's Department of Anthropology. She taught Māori fibre arts over many years, mainly in the Māori Studies Department at the University of Auckland where she was a Senior Lecturer in Māori Material Culture. In 2007 she retired from university lecturing.


Work

Lander was first introduced to muka (flax fibre) by noted weaver
Diggeress Te Kanawa Diggeress Rangituatahi Te Kanawa (9 March 1920 – 30 July 2009) was a New Zealand Māori people, Māori tohunga raranga (master weaver) of Ngāti Maniapoto and Ngāti Kinohaku descent. At the time of her death she was regarded as New Zealand's ...
in 1984, when she went to stay several times with the senior artist at Ohaki Maori village, near
Waitomo Waitomo is a rural community in the King Country region of New Zealand's North Island. There are several solutional cave systems in the area around the village, which are popular tourist attractions. Restaurants and accommodation are centred in ...
and learned the basics of preparing materials and techniques such as whatu (finger twining). Her end of year installation at Elam, titled ''Te Kohanga Harakeke'' ('The Flax Nest') included a structure covered in milled flax in the shape of a massive inverted nest, which sheltered a young
harakeke ''Phormium tenax'' (called flax in New Zealand English; in Māori; New Zealand flax outside New Zealand; and New Zealand hemp in historical nautical contexts) is an evergreen perennial plant native to New Zealand and Norfolk Island that is an ...
(flax) plant. Lander's first public art exhibition was as part of the group exhibition ''Karanga Karanga'' at the Fisher Gallery (now
Te Tuhi Te Tuhi, formerly known as Te Tuhi Centre for the Arts, Te Tuhi - The Mark, Te Tuhi Gallery and Pakuranga Arts Society is a public contemporary art gallery situated in Pakuranga, Auckland, New Zealand. Managed by Te Tuhi Contemporary Art Trust a ...
Centre for the Arts, Pakuranga, Auckland) in 1986. She describes her three decades working with muka as a 'journey of discovery'. In a recent artist statement Lander said:
I was seduced by the beauty and magic of muka. My first public installation in 1986 – ''E kore koe e ngaro he kakano i ruia mai i Rangiatea'' in the ''Karanga, Karanga'' exhibition – featured whenu (warp threads) and aho (weft threads) that I had carefully prepared to make my first korowai. Instead, I suspended them in an ethereal cloud-like formation over a swirl of flax seed.
In 1998 art historian
Priscilla Pitts Priscilla Pitts is a New Zealand writer and art curator. Biography Pitts was educated at the University of Auckland, gaining an MA in English and Art History. In the 1980s, Pitts co-founded the magazine ''Antic,'' which focused on literature a ...
wrote that Lander's combination of 'conventional university art school' study and training with traditional Māori weavers was reflected in her work:
Though much of her work is a response to weaving arts, Lander seldom actually weaves – at least, in the works she exhibits in gallery spaces. Rather, she uses, often to astonishing effect, the materials used in traditional Maori weaving and dying. These include pingao and feathers, but most of all harakeke (New Zealand flax) in all its forms – its leaves, its handsome flower and seed heads, the seeds and muka (the fine silky fibre obtained from the leaves). With these she combines materials from the Western world.
Pitts gives Lander's 1994 work ''This is not a kete'', made for the exhibition ''Art Now'' at the former Museum of New Zealand (now the
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is New Zealand's national museum and is located in Wellington. Usually known as Te Papa ( Māori for ' the treasure box'), it opened in 1998 after the merging of the National Museum of New Zealand ...
) as an example of the way her work combines traditional Māori crafts and Western sculptural or installation practices. Lander's work plays on
René Magritte René François Ghislain Magritte (; 21 November 1898 – 15 August 1967) was a Belgium, Belgian surrealist artist known for his depictions of familiar objects in unfamiliar, unexpected contexts, which often provoked questions about the nature ...
's famous painting ''Ceci n'est pas une pipe'' with a woven
kete KETE (99.7 FM; "Three Angels Broadcasting Network") is a terrestrial radio station, licensed to Sulphur Bluff, Texas, United States, and owned by Brazos TV, Inc. KETE broadcasts a Christian preaching format, featuring programming from the Th ...
(flax basket) placed on top of a plinth with the words 'This is not a kete' inscribed on it. More kete were arranged on the floor of the gallery and dramatically lit. Pitts writes
'Here, in the context of the art exhibition, 'practical' objects – simple woven flax bags – are elevated to the status of art objects. ... However, this particular art exhibition was located in what was also an ethnography and history museum, within which the collection, cataloguing, and display of things like kete divorces them from their cultural, spiritual and/or utilitarian contexts and transforms them into artefacts.
In 2006 Lander was one of fifteen New Zealand artists, most of Māori and Pacific Island descent, who were invited to take part in the ''Pasifika Styles'' exhibition by making site-specific works throughout the
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge The Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, also known as MAA, at the University of Cambridge houses the university's collections of local antiquities, together with archaeological and ethnographic artefacts from around the world. The museum ...
that responded to objects in the museum's collection. For the exhibition Lander reworked two previous commissions, ''This is not a kete'' and pieces from ''Mrs Cook's kete'', a 2002 collaboration with Christine Hellyar at the
Pitt Rivers Museum Pitt Rivers Museum is a museum displaying the archaeological and anthropological collections of the University of Oxford in England. The museum is located to the east of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, and can only be accessed ...
at
Oxford University The University of Oxford is a collegiate research university in Oxford, England. There is evidence of teaching as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the second-oldest continuously operating u ...
. Lander also made new pieces, including the site-specific installations ''Airy-Theory Artefacts'' (woven objects suspended in front of a screened window) and ''Tane Raises His Eyebrows'' (a crescent-shaped weaving placed over a decorative wooden door lintel). She also made a piece titled ''Crown Grab Bag'' for the exhibition, a large woven crown placed on a royal purple silk pillow with gold tassels. In the publication accompanying the exhibition, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology curator Anita Herle wrote
The work references the New Zealand Foreshore and Seabed Act of 2004, which empowered the New Zealand government, 'the Crown', to override tribal rights to pursue customary claims to the foreshore and seabed through the courts. Lander's crown is delicately woven from a variety of fibres, including plant materials that grow along the foreshore – the creation of the crown itself is thus a subtle but defiant act of re-appropriation. Shells and fishing hooks from the museum's collection are placed on the base of the case. Strands of pingao fibre, stitched into the fabric lining at the back of the case, form inverted U-shapes representing the raised eyebrows of Tane (god of the forest). According to Māori legend, following a dispute between Tane and Tangaroa (god of the sea) Tane's eyebrows were flung onto the sand dunes, which mark the liminal space between the forest and the sea. Here Lander connects contemporary political conflicts to legendary battles.
Responding to objects and
taonga ''Taonga'' or ''taoka'' (in South Island Māori) is a Māori-language word that refers to a treasured possession in Māori culture. It lacks a direct translation into English, making its use in the Treaty of Waitangi significant. The current ...
held in cultural institutions' collections remains a strong feature of Lander's work. In a 2015 exhibition at the
National Library of New Zealand The National Library of New Zealand () is charged with the obligation to "enrich the cultural and economic life of New Zealand and its interchanges with other nations" (National Library of New Zealand (Te Puna Mātauranga) Act 2003). Under the ...
(a collaboration with Christine Hellyar and Jo Torr) Lander made a number of works relating to works in the library's art and archival collections. Her piece ''Hariata’s War Garb'' is inspired by Joseph Merrett's 1846 watercolour ''The Warrior Chieftains of New Zealand''. The portrait depicts
Hone Heke Honing is a kind of metalworking. Hone may also refer to: * Hone (name) (incl. Hōne), a list of people with the surname, given name or nickname * Hõne language, spoken in Gombe State and Taraba State, Nigeria * Hône Hône (; Valdôtain: (lo ...
, the chief
Kawiti Te Ruki Kawiti (1770s – 5 May 1854) was a prominent Māori people, Māori rangatira (chief). He and Hōne Heke successfully fought the United Kingdom, British in the Flagstaff War in 1845–46.James Belich (historian), Belich, James. ''The New ...
, and Heke's wife Hariata. Hariata is shown wearing a woven sash unlike anything Lander had seen before. Researching her own family history, Lander found descriptions of Hariata written by her great-great grandfather James Johnston Fergusson. One document describes Hariata leading 700 men; another as being ‘young, tall, and rather goodlooking’, wearing ‘a tartan dress with red sash slung around her shoulders like a shepherd’s plaid’. Lander recreated the sash for the exhibition, along with a number of other pieces. In a review of the exhibition art historian Jill Trevelyan noted that Lander drew on her own experience learning weaving under Diggeress Te Kanawa to produce the works ''Rongo's samplers'', a reimagining of the first works produced by a new practitioner. In 2017 Lander began a tuakana/teina (mentor/mentee) relationship with
Mata Aho Collective The Mataaho Collective is a group of four New Zealand artists: Erena Baker, Sarah Hudson, Bridget Reweti and Terri Te Tau. They are known for their large scale fibre-based artwork. In 2024 the Mataaho Collective received the Golden Lion award ...
, a group of four wahine Māori (Māori women) artists. In 2021 their collaborative work ''Atapō'' was awarded the biennal Walters Art Prize. In 2023 Maureen Lander, in collaboration with artist Denise Batchelor and composer Stìobhan Lothian, created the online artwork ''Hukatai ~ Sea Foam'' as part of the international art project World Weather Network. Lander and Batchelor came together to monitor the hukatai (sea foams) through walks on the shoreline of Te Hokianga Nui a Kupe, the Hokianga Harbour, in north-west New Zealand. These walks were documented through a series of lens-based observations which became a fibre installation as part of the 2023
Te Tuhi Te Tuhi, formerly known as Te Tuhi Centre for the Arts, Te Tuhi - The Mark, Te Tuhi Gallery and Pakuranga Arts Society is a public contemporary art gallery situated in Pakuranga, Auckland, New Zealand. Managed by Te Tuhi Contemporary Art Trust a ...
exhibition ''Huarere: Weather Eye, Weather Ear'' curated by Janine Randerson.


Selected exhibitions

Lander began exhibiting her artwork in 1986. Having exhibited both nationally and internationally, Lander currently enjoys exhibiting with other artists in the small communities around the Hokianga where her ancestors lived. *2023 ''Aho Marama: Strings of Light'',
Christchurch Art Gallery The Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetū, commonly known as the Christchurch Art Gallery, is the public art gallery of the city of Christchurch, New Zealand. It has its own substantial art collection and also presents a programme of New ...
*2021 ''Atapō'', with
Mata Aho Collective The Mataaho Collective is a group of four New Zealand artists: Erena Baker, Sarah Hudson, Bridget Reweti and Terri Te Tau. They are known for their large scale fibre-based artwork. In 2024 the Mataaho Collective received the Golden Lion award ...
, Walters Art Prize, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki *2021-2020 ''Toi Tu Toi Ora: Contemporary Maori Art'',
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki is the principal public gallery in Auckland, New Zealand. It has the most extensive collection of national and international art in New Zealand and frequently hosts travelling international exhibitions. Set be ...
, Auckland *2018 ''Hariata’s War Garb'' (part of The Ngāpuhi Festival),
Northcote College Northcote College is a New Zealand secondary school for boys and girls (co-educational) located in Northcote, Auckland, Northcote, Auckland. The school caters for Form 3 (Year 9) to Form 7 (Year 13). It was founded in 1877 and is the oldest sec ...
, Auckland *2017 ''Flat-Pack Whakapapa'',
The Dowse Art Museum The Dowse Art Museum is a municipal art gallery in Lower Hutt, New Zealand. Opening in 1971 in the Lower Hutt CBD, The Dowse occupies a stand-alone building adjacent to other municipal facilities. The building was completely remodelled in 2 ...
and touring throughout 2018; ''The Delicate Balance of Wobbling Stars'',
Corban Estate Arts Centre Corban Estate Arts Centre is an arts precinct in West Auckland, New Zealand. Established in 2002 at the site of the Mt Lebanon Vineyard and Winery, the arts centre provides creative production, theatre and gallery space to New Zealand artists. ...
*2015 ''Te Wā Tōiri: Fluid Horizons'',
Auckland Art Gallery Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki is the principal public gallery in Auckland, New Zealand. It has the most extensive collection of national and international art in New Zealand and frequently hosts travelling international exhibitions. Set be ...
: an exhibition from the collections of the gallery including Lander's major installation work ''Hou Angiangi'' (2003). The Māori title of the exhibition was suggested by Lander.; ''Tell tails'',
National Library of New Zealand The National Library of New Zealand () is charged with the obligation to "enrich the cultural and economic life of New Zealand and its interchanges with other nations" (National Library of New Zealand (Te Puna Mātauranga) Act 2003). Under the ...
, Wellington, with Christine Hellyar and Jo Torr *2014 ''Flag It'', The Depot, Devonport and No 1, Parnell St Gallery, Rawene *2013 ''Towards the Morning Sun'' Campbelltown Arts Centre,
Sydney Sydney is the capital city of the States and territories of Australia, state of New South Wales and the List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city in Australia. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds Syd ...
; ''whetu-whenu-whenua'' Lopdell House Gallery (off-site),
Titirangi Titirangi is a suburb of West Auckland, New Zealand, West Auckland in the Waitākere Ranges (local board area), Waitākere Ranges local board area of the city of Auckland in northern New Zealand. It is an affluent, residential suburb located t ...
*2012 ''Kahu Ora/Living Cloaks''
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is New Zealand's national museum and is located in Wellington. Usually known as Te Papa ( Māori for ' the treasure box'), it opened in 1998 after the merging of the National Museum of New Zealand ...
*2011 ''An Ephemeral Practice'' Northart Gallery, Te Taumata series, Auckland Matariki Festival *2010 Site specific fibre installation,
Arataki Visitor Centre Arataki Visitor Centre is a tourism and education centre in West Auckland, New Zealand, often described as the gateway to the Waitākere Ranges. The centre provides information about the Waitākere Ranges, and organises educational events. Hi ...
, Waitakere Regional Park,
Auckland Auckland ( ; ) is a large metropolitan city in the North Island of New Zealand. It has an urban population of about It is located in the greater Auckland Region, the area governed by Auckland Council, which includes outlying rural areas and ...
; ''Where are we?'' Lopdell House Gallery, Titirangi *2009 ''Hotere Country'' Village Arts, Kohukohu,
Hokianga The Hokianga is an area surrounding the Hokianga Harbour, also known as the Hokianga River, a long Estuary, estuarine drowned valley on the west coast in the north of the North Island of New Zealand. The original name, still used by local Mā ...
; ''Kauwae 09'' Mangere Arts Centre,
Nathan Homestead Nathan Homestead (Māori language, Māori: ''Pukepuke)'' is a historic site located in Manurewa, Auckland, New Zealand. Developed from the remnants of the Nathan family farm, the Homestead and its surrounding park spans 3.7 hectares and features ...
, Manurewa and Tairawhiti Museum, Gisborne *2008 ''POST-Stitch'' Lopdell House Gallery, Titirangi *2007 ''Conversations Across Time: Whakawhiti Korero''
Canterbury Museum, Christchurch The Canterbury Museum is a museum located in the Christchurch Central City, central city of Christchurch, New Zealand, in the city's Cultural Precinct. The museum was established in 1867 with Julius von Haast – whose collection formed its co ...
*2006–2008 ''Pasifika Styles'' Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, UK *2005 ''Palm Lines'' in collaboration with
Samuel Wagan Watson Samuel Wagan Watson is a contemporary Indigenous Australian poet. Early life and education Samuel Wagan Watson was born in Brisbane and is of Aboriginal ( Munanjali and Birri Gubba), Irish, German, and Dutch descent. His father is novelist an ...
and Anne Kirker
Museum of Brisbane The Museum of Brisbane (MoB) is a history and art museum in Brisbane, Australia. The museum explores contemporary and historic Brisbane through a program of art and social history exhibitions, workshops, talks, guided tours, and children's activi ...
*2004–2005 ''Shade House'' in collaboration with Robert Sullivan and Briar Wood, Whangarei Art Museum, Lopdell House Gallery, Titirangi, and Pataka Art + Museum *2004–2007 ''The Eternal Thread: Te Aho Mutunga Kore'' Pataka Museum + Art, Porirua, then touring to venues in NZ and United States *2002 ''Mrs Cook’s Kete''
Pitt Rivers Museum Pitt Rivers Museum is a museum displaying the archaeological and anthropological collections of the University of Oxford in England. The museum is located to the east of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, and can only be accessed ...
, Oxford, UK, with Christine Hellyar *2001 ''Purangiaho'' Auckland City Art Gallery *1998 ''haze'' in collaboration with Kaylynn Two Trees and Toi Te Rito Maihi, New Gallery- Auckland Art Gallery *1997 ''Nga Uri o Rahiri'' Govett Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth *1995 ''Korurangi'' New Gallery, Auckland Art Gallery *1994 ''Art Now'', Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa *1993 ''Pū Manawa'' Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa; 1993 '' Alter / Image'', City Gallery Wellington


Selected publications

*Lander, M.R. ''Horeke or Kohukohu? Charles Heaphy's "View of the Kahukahu, Hokianga River 1839"'', Turnbull Library Record, Vol XXII, No 1:33–40, 1989 * *Lander, M.R. & Wood, B. ''Glorified Scales'' Auckland: Maureen Lander, 2001 *Lander, M.R., Sullivan, R, & Wood, B. ''Shade House'' Whangarei: Whangarei Art Museum, 2004 *Lander, M.R. & Maihi, T. ''He Kete He Korero'' Auckland: Reed Publishing, 2005 *Lander, M. R. 'Te Ao Tawhito/Te Ao Hou. Entwined Threads of Tradition and Innovation' in ''Whatu Kakahu/Māori Cloaks'' (ed. Awhina Tamarapa), Wellington: Te Papa Press 2011, pp. 60–73


Honours and awards

*2021, Walters Art Prize winner (with Mata Aho Collective) *2020 Appointed a
Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit The New Zealand Order of Merit () is an order of merit in the New Zealand royal honours system. It was established by royal warrant on 30 May 1996 by Elizabeth II, Queen of New Zealand, "for those persons who in any field of endeavour, have ...
, for services to Māori art, in the 2020 Queen's Birthday Honours *2019 Ngā Tohu ā Tā Kingi Ihaka , Sir Kingi Ihaka Awards recognising lifetime contribution, Te Waka Toi Awards *2002 Inaugural Māori Academic Excellence Award (Fine Arts, Music & Performing Arts), ‘Te Tohu Toi Ururangi’ sponsored by Toi Maori. *1992 Graduate Scholarship, University of Auckland *1985 Senior Prize in Fine Arts, Elam School of Fine Arts, University of Auckland *1984 Annual Prize in Māori Studies, University of Auckland


Residencies

*2013 Campbelltown Arts Centre, Sydney. *2010 ARC Artist-in-Parks residency, Titirangi. *2010 Artist-in-Residence, Parramatta Artists’ Studios, West Sydney. *2009 Hancock Fellow at the Victorian Tapestry Workshop, Melbourne. *2006 ''Pasifika Styles'' at CUMAA. *2006 Kilmartin House Museum in Scotland *2002 Artist in Residence, Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology, Nelson. *1996 The Performance Space Centre, Redfern, Sydney.


Personal life

Lander is of
Ngāpuhi Ngāpuhi (also known as Ngāpuhi-Nui-Tonu or Ngā Puhi) is a Māori iwi associated with the Northland regions of New Zealand centred in the Hokianga, the Bay of Islands, and Whangārei. According to the 2023 New Zealand census, the estimate ...
, Te Hikutu, Irish,
Scottish Scottish usually refers to something of, from, or related to Scotland, including: *Scottish Gaelic, a Celtic Goidelic language of the Indo-European language family native to Scotland *Scottish English *Scottish national identity, the Scottish ide ...
and
English English usually refers to: * English language * English people English may also refer to: Culture, language and peoples * ''English'', an adjective for something of, from, or related to England * ''English'', an Amish ter ...
(
Yorkshire Yorkshire ( ) is an area of Northern England which was History of Yorkshire, historically a county. Despite no longer being used for administration, Yorkshire retains a strong regional identity. The county was named after its county town, the ...
) descent.


Further information


Dr Maureen Lander – Māori weavers making the most of the changing world
video interview by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa * Elenaor Wenman
Whakapapa and taonga celebrated at double exhibition opening
DominionPost, 18 July 2017 * Mata Aho Collective
An Art Matriarch: Why Maureen Lander is a Boss
Pantograph Punch, 7 August 2017 * Sonja van Kerkhoff
The Colonial Bonnet as War Garb
EyeContact, 18 July 2018
Interview with Mata Aho Collective and Maureen Lander
Auckland Art Gallery, 2021 * Kerry Lander and Maureen Lander
The Maureen Lander Archive
Christchurch Art Gallery ''Bulletin'', 24 November 2023 * Moya Lawson
String Games
Christchurch Art Gallery ''Bulletin'', 24 November 2023


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lander, maureen 1942 births New Zealand contemporary artists Elam Art School alumni Living people New Zealand Māori artists New Zealand Māori weavers New Zealand weavers People from the Hokianga Ngāpuhi people New Zealand women textile artists Members of the New Zealand Order of Merit University of Auckland alumni